Similar presentations

1
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook A Lenten Bible Study Based on The Screwtape Letters By C. S. Lewis

2
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook Letter XXV “The Same Old Thing”

3
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “What we want, if men become Christians at all, is to keep them in a state of mind I call ‘Christianity And.’ You know— If they must be Christians, let hem at least be Christians with a difference. Substitute for faith itself some fashion with a Christian colouring. Work on their horror of the Same Old Thing.

4
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “Now, just as we pick out and exaggerate the pleasure of eating to produce gluttony, so we pick out this natural pleasantness of change and twist it into a demand for absolute novelty… Only by our incessant efforts is this demand for infinite, or unrhythmical change kept up. This demand is valuable in various ways.”

5
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “In the first place it diminishes pleasure while increasing desire. The pleasure of novelty is by its very nature more subject than any other to the law of diminishing returns… And again, the more rapacious this desire, the sooner it must eat up all the innocent source of pleasure and pass on to those the enemy forbids.”

6
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “The use of Fashions is to distract the attentions of men from their real dangers. We direct the fashionable outcry of each generation against those vices of which it is least in danger and fix its approval on the virtue nearest to that vice which we are trying to make endemic.”

7
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “The game is to have them all running about with fire extinguishers whenever there is a flood, and all crowding to that side of the boat which is already nearly gunwales under. Thus we make it fashionable to expose the dangers of enthusiasm at the very moment when they are all really becoming worldly and lukewarm…”

8
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “But the greatest triumph of all is to elevate this horror of the Same Old Thing into a philosophy so that nonsense in the intellect may reinforce corruption of the will… He wants men… to ask very simple questions: Is it righteous? Is it prudent? Is it possible? Now if we can keep men asking: ‘Is it progressive or reactionary? Is this that way that History is going?’ They will neglect the relevant questions.”

9
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “For the descriptive adjective ‘unchanged’ we have substituted the emotional adjective ‘stagnant.’ We have trained them to think of the future as a promised land which favoured heroes attain—not as something which everyone reaches at the rate of sixty minutes an hour, whatever he does, whoever he is.”

10
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook Letter XXVI “Unselfishness”

11
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “A woman means by Unselfishness chiefly taking trouble for others; a man means not giving trouble to others. As a result, a woman who is quite far gone in the Enemy’s service will make a nuisance of herself on a larger scale than any man except those whom Our Father has dominated completely;

12
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “and, conversely, a man will live long in the Enemy’s camp before he undertakes as much spontaneous work to please others as a quite ordinary woman may do every day. Thus while the woman thinks of doing good offices and the man of respecting other people’s rights, each sex, without an obvious unreason, can and does regard the other as radically selfish.”

14
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “The use of his ‘love’ to distract his mind fro the Enemy is, of course, obvious, but you reveal what poor use you are making of it when you say the the whole question of distraction and the wandering mind has now become one of the chief subject of his prayers. That means that you have largely failed.”

15
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “Once he accepts the distraction as his present problem and lays that before the Enemy and makes it the main them of his prayers and endeavours, then, so far from doing good, you have done harm. Anything, even a sin, which has the total effect of moving him up to the Enemy makes against us in the long run.”

16
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “If you tried to explain to him that men’s prayers today are one of the innumerable coordinates with which the Enemy harmonizes the weather of tomorrow, he would reply that then the enemy always knew men were going to make those prayers and, if so, they did not pray freely, but were predestined to do so.”

17
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “How it does so is not problem at all; for the Enemy does not foresee the humans making their free contributions in a future, but sees them doing so in His unbounded Now. And obviously to watch a man doing something is not to make him do it.”

19
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “If only he can be kept alive, you have time itself for you ally. The long, dull, monotonous years of middle-aged prosperity or middle-aged adversity are excellent campaigning weather. You see, it is so hard for these creatures to persevere.

20
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “The routine of adversity, the gradual decay of youthful loves and youthful hopes, the quiet despair (hardly felt as pain) of ever overcoming the chronic temptations with which we have again and again defeated them, the drabness which we create in their lives, and the inarticulate resentment with which we teach them to respond to it—all this provides ample opportunities of wearing out a soul by attrition.”

21
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “If, on the other hand, the middle years prove prosperous, our position is even stronger. Prosperity knits a man to the world. He feels that he is ‘finding his place in it,’ while really it is finding its place in him… You notice that the young are generally less unwilling to dies than the middle-aged and the old.”

22
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “The truth is that the Enemy, having oddly destined these mere animals to life in His own eternal world, has guarded them pretty effectively from the danger of feeling at home anywhere else.”

23
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God.” Mark 10:25 (See also Matthew 19:24 and Luke 18:25)

24
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “Be in the world, but not of it.”

25
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “I have given them Your word; and the world has hated them because they are not of the world, just as I am not of the world. They are not of the world, just as I am not of the world. Sanctify them by Your truth. Your word is truth. As You sent Me into the world, I also have sent them into the world.” John 17:14, 16-18

26
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God.” Romans 12:2

27
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “You move us to delight in praising You; for You have formed us for Yourself, and our hearts are restless till they find rest in You.” St. Augustine of Hippo The Confessions (Book I, Chapter 1)

28
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook Letter XIX Cowardice or Courage

29
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “Hatred we can manage… If conscience resists, muddle him. Let him say that he feels hatred no on his own behalf but on that of the women and children and that a Christian is told to forgive hi own, not other people’s enemies.”

30
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “In other words let him consider himself sufficiently identified with the women and children to feel hatred on their behalf, but not sufficiently identified to regard their enemies as his own and therefore proper objects of forgiveness.”

31
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “It is therefore possible to lose as much as we gain by making your man a coward; he may learn too much about himself. There is, of course, always the chance, not of chloroforming the shame, but of aggravating it and producing Despair! This would be a great triumph.”

32
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “It would show that he had believed in, and accepted, the Enemy’s forgiveness of his other sins only because he himself did not fully feel their sinfulness—that in respect of the one vice which he really understand in its full depth of dishonour he cannot seek, nor credit, the Mercy.”

33
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “But I fear you have already let him get too far in the Enemy’s school, and he knows that Despair is a greater sin than any of the sins which provoke it.”

34
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “For we do not have a High Priest who cannot sympathize with our weaknesses, but was in all points tempted as we are, yet without sin. Let us therefore come boldly to the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need.” Hebrews 4:15-16

35
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.” I John 1:9

36
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “For remember: the act of cowardice is all that matters; the emotion of fear is, in itself, no sin and, though we enjoy it, it does us no good.”

37
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook Letter XXX What Is Real?

38
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “They tell each other, of some great spiritual experience, ‘all that really happened was that you heard some music in a lighted building’; here ‘real’ means the bare physical facts separated from the other elements in the experience they actually had.”

39
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “On the other hand, they will also say, ‘It’s all very well discussing that high dive as you sit her in an armchair, but wait till you get up there and see what it’s really like’: here ‘real’ is being used in the opposite sense to mean, not the physical facts… but the emotional effect those facts will have on a human consciousness.

40
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “The general rule… is that in all experience which can make them happier or better only the physical facts are ‘real,’ while the spiritual elements are ‘subjective’; in all experience which can discourage or corrupt them the spiritual elements are the main reality, and to ignore them is to be an escapist.”

41
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “Your patient, properly handled, will have no difficulty in regarding his emotion at the sight of human entrails as a revelation of reality and his emotion at the sight of happy children or fair weather as mere sentiment.”

42
A Peek Inside the Devil’s Playbook “Finally, brethren, whatever things are true, whatever things are noble, whatever things are just, whatever things are pure, whatever things are lovely, whatever things are of good report, if there is any virtue and if there is anything praiseworthy—meditate on these things.” Philippians 4:8

46
Church of the Messiah invites you to join us in Fifty Days of Glory an Easter Bible study using the newly released book by the CEC’s own Canon Mark Pearson. Wednesday Nights from April 23 rd through May 21 st at 7:00.